Cuauhnahuac (Mdz2v)
This compound glyph for the place name Cuauhnahuac (Cuernavaca, today) shows a vertical tree (cuahuitl) with a leader and two branches, each with green foliage. The trunk is a terracotta color, and the visible roots are red. The trunk has an open, toothless mouth and a speech (nahuatl) scroll emerges from it, as though the tree is speaking to someone to the viewer's left.
Stephanie Wood
The visual for speech has nothing to do with speaking but, rather, provides the phonetic element for -nahuac, a locative suffix meaning "near."
Stephanie Wood
quauhnahuac. puo
Cuauhnahuac, pueblo
Stephanie Wood
c. 1541, or by 1553 at the latest
Stephanie Wood
el habla, el discurso, speech, trees, árboles, cerca, junto, near, next to
cuahui(tl), tree, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/cuahuitl
nahua(tl), language/speech, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/nahuatl
-nahuac (locative suffix), near, https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/nahuac
-c (locative suffix), https://nahuatl.wired-humanities.org/content/c
"Near the Trees" (Whittaker, Deciphering Aztec Hieroglyphs, 2021, 103); "Beside the Trees" (Berdan and Anawalt, 1992, vol. 1, 201)
CUAUH•nahua or CUAUH•NAHUAC
"Cerca de los Árboles"
Stephanie Wood
Codex Mendoza, folio 2 verso, https://digital.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/objects/2fea788e-2aa2-4f08-b6d9-648c00..., image 15 of 188.
The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, hold the original manuscript, the MS. Arch. Selden. A. 1. This image is published here under the UK Creative Commons, “Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 License” (CC-BY-NC-SA 3.0).